Alt Investments
OPINION OF THE WEEK: Is Gold Benefiting From An Economic, Geopolitical "Vibe Shift"?

Gold has risen above $3,000 and forces appear set to underpin the yellow metal. The editor reflects on what its behaviour says about economic and geopolitical conditions.
When a “safe-haven” asset such as gold breaks above a round
number – $3,000 per ounce, which is what happened on
Monday this week – it triggers thoughts on whether a wider
“vibe shift” is happening in finance.
As we noticed a
few days ago, several wealth managers such as UBS and Pictet in Switzerland, and
DWS, the German firm (see
examples
here,
here and
here, respectively), have been positive on gold for its
hedging qualities.
Gold is getting more attention and, if certain forces continue,
this will intensify.
In a note in February, Paisan Limratanamongkol, head of strategic
asset allocation and quantitative research, Citi Private
Bank, cautioned that recent price rises in the yellow metal
haven’t always followed traditional patterns. Even so, the
comments contain enough to make one wonder whether gold can
keep its ascent.
What Limratanamongkol observed was that “in one of its most
consistent relationships, gold has typically moved in the
opposite direction to the US dollar.” The writer goes on to
note that the US Dollar Index [an index of the dollar’s value
against several currencies] is higher today than it was in 2018,
which might have been consistent with weaker gold, but that’s not
the case this time. Even so, one relationship that might hold
more robustly is that gold tends to rise when the geopolitical
environment is uncertain – as it is now. “In the last decade or
so, uncertainty has persisted at higher than customary levels,
and gold has kept registering gains,” Limratanamongkol wrote.
Another positive force comes from central banks and retail
investors.
Dollar under a cloud
US equities have taken a beating (the S&P 500 Index is
down 4.6 per cent since early January) amid worries about
President Trump’s pro-tariff policies, as well as how he appears
to want lower interest rates and a lower dollar exchange
rate: this bodes well for gold.
Related to this is the debate that has gone on as long as I’ve
been a financial journalist (30 years) as to whether the
dollar’s status as the pre-eminent global reserve currency is in
danger. Admittedly, predictions of its demise have been, in
Mark Twain terms, much exaggerated. Those who have bet on that
demise have been left looking foolish.
But maybe this time it is different. Benjamin Dubois, the head of
overlay management at
Edmond de Rothschild Asset Management, thinks that the Trump
administration wants the dollar to depreciate
significantly.
Dubois pointed out that since 2008 and the subprime crisis,
the Dollar Index has risen more than 40 per cent, with just a few
episodes of weakness (only four bearish years in the past 15).
“But over the past few days, weakening fundamentals have sent the
dollar into a downward correction. The recent economic data for
the US, which came in below expectations, and concerns over the
country’s technology sector, has raised doubts over the
resilience of the American economy,” he said.
And Dubois writes that Europe’s move to step up military spending
significantly, filling an expected gap left by a US retreat from
European military engagement, boosts perceptions of the eurozone
economy in growth mode, and this weighs on the dollar exchange
rate. The Dollar Index has fallen more than 4 per cent since
early January.
“While the impact of these factors is already considerable,
Trump’s trade war and his plans to restructure the global
financial system are putting the dollar at even greater risk,
Dubois said. And he refers to how S Miran, a Trump senior
economic advisor, thinks the US currency must depreciate to bring
industry back into the US, working alongside the tariff
policy.
Debt woes
A desire to weaken a reserve currency to this extent
raises urgent questions about how the US can go on
servicing $36.2 trillion in public debt, at a debt-to-GDP
ratio of 120 per cent. The US, as President Trump will have been
made aware, spends more on servicing that debt than on defence.
According to data from the House Budget Committee, that increase
in spending on interest surpassed defence for the first time last
year; it is also higher than Medicare and Medicaid.
Maybe some of the worries that fuel the gold price are due to
whether policymakers, both on the Republican and Democrat side,
have the intestinal fortitude to balance the budget books and
rein in debt without crippling rises in taxes. Given the
political dynamics of an ageing population, this is a tough call.
And these issues aren’t peculiar to the US, of course. Much of
Western Europe is in a similar bind.
Gold does not – so the conventional argument goes – produce a
yield. (There are businesses that argue that lending in gold and
being paid for it does produce a yield, as the US-based firm
Monetary
Metals argues
here.) Gold has been a medium of exchange for thousands of
years; even the more recent phenomenon of bitcoin is a sort of
tribute act to the idea of a monetary medium based on a scarce
resource, rather than something that a central bank can print
whenever it thinks fit. Even so, debates continues on whether
gold could ever displace fiat currencies or win back more of a
mainstream place in the way we handle money. It is easy
to see why gold is shining.
As ever, the point from Citi Private Bank’s Limratanamongkol
seems a wise place to end: “While fraught with uncertainty,
taking a controlled and managed approach is still better than
allowing feelings and beliefs to guide one’s approach to seeking
a portfolio allocation to gold.”